Harman Patil (Editor)

House Guests

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Genres
  
funk

Active until
  
1972

Labels
  
House Guests

Genre
  
Funk

House Guests www45rpmrecordscomOHimg28528jpg

Associated acts
  
The J.B.'s, Funkadelic, Bootsy's Rubber Band

Past members
  
Bootsy Collins Catfish Collins Clayton "Chicken" Gunnells Robert McCullough Frankie "Kash" Waddy

Origin
  
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States (1971)

Similar
  
Godmoma, Kiddo, Calvin Simon, Tiki Fulwood, Mutiny

The house guests velour s winter battle of the bands


House Guests was an early-1970s American funk group that consisted of bassist William "Bootsy" Collins, his older brother Phelps "Catfish" Collins on guitar, Frank "Kash" Waddy on drums, Clayton "Chicken" Gunnells on trumpet, and Robert McCullough on saxophone.

Contents

House Guests was formed in 1971 after the Collins brothers left The J.B.'s, James Brown's band. The band released two singles on their own House Guests label in 1971, "What So Never The Dance" becoming a minor hit.

During 1971 several members of Funkadelic quit, and George Clinton invited the members of House Guests to join Funkadelic in their place. Their unique contributions to Funkadelic's sound can be heard on that band's 1972 release, America Eats Its Young.

In 1976 several members of House Guests became members of Bootsy's Rubber Band, Bootsy Collins' band within the P-Funk musical collective.

Discography

  • "What So Never The Dance" pt. 1 /"What So Never The Dance" pt. 2 (1971)
  • "My Mind Set Me Free" pt. 1 / "My Mind Set Me Free" pt. 2 (1971)
  • Songs

    What So Never the Dance1994
    My Mind Set Me Free - Part 11972
    My Mind Set Me Free - Part 21972

    References

    House Guests Wikipedia